Main Street in Loreauville has evolved over the years since the establishment of the village. • (Nick) Borel's Grocery, situated on Main and Braquet Street at the north end of the village. Borel's grocery was in operation from the late 1940s until the mid-1970s when it was sold. Several businesses have subsequently occupied the building. • Homer's
Texaco Service Station, located at the northeast corner of the intersection of
Louisiana Highway 86 and Lake Dauterive Road (Louisiana Highway 3242). The family-owned business was in continuous operation from 1946 until the late 1990s. The existing large metal frame of the building was constructed by Roy Breaux Sr. and the welders of Breaux's Bay Craft in 1961. • W.W. Vaughn General Merchandise (
General Store), located at the southeast corner of the intersection of Louisiana Highway 86 and Lake Dauterive Road (Louisiana Highway 3242). The family-owned business was located in a 19th-century brick and wood-frame structure that operated from the early 1900s until the early 1970s. The store originally opened as the "Edgar J. Vaughn General Merchandise" store prior to
World War I. As was common in those days, the Edgar Vaughn store issued its own tin coinage as
local currency in various denominations (mainly 1-, 5-, and 10-cent denominations) when dealing in
barter transactions as a way to equalize transactions. Few of the coins exist today, but a few were donated to the Acadian Village museum by family members. The building was eradicated in the early 21st century. • The OJ Oubre Lumber Company, named for Oscar J. Oubre, operated from the present location of the Judice Building Supplies (JBS) store. The Loreauville branch of the OJ Oubre lumber company was a separate store owned and operated by the OJ Oubre lumber company of New Iberia. • The State National Bank Building, located at the intersection of Main Street and Ed Broussard Road, is a masonry facility that was constructed in the early 1960s and served as the only financial institution in Loreauville for many years. Ownership and identity of the facility has changed many times over the years, but many residents still refer to the facility as the "State National Bank Building". A large
clock was a prominent feature of the original bank and served the local residents and teenagers in the 1960s and '70s. • U.S. Postal Mail facility (pictured). Located on Main Street, this small building served as the official post office for ZIP code 70552 until the mid-1960s, when it was replaced by a larger brick facility at the same location. A modern larger facility constructed in the 1990s replaced the 1960s era building on the northern edge of the village. The mid-1960s brick post office structure remains and has been the site of several businesses in the intervening years. • Loreauville Substation of the Iberia Parish Sheriff's Department, located on Main Street adjacent to the Meat Market. This small wood-framed structure served as a police substation and radio dispatch terminal for a short period during the 1970s. A temporary holding facility was constructed but rarely used. The office was staffed by one part-time employee and served to take offense reports, answer routine inquiries, and coordinate local law enforcement presence in the village. The substation was closed in the mid-1970s. • Lloyd's Meat Market, located on Main Street between Railroad Avenue and Bourgeois Street in a wood and brick-framed structure. This
butcher offered locally produced fresh seafood and meat from the 1960s until the early 1980s. • The Brown Derby, located on Main Street just north of Railroad Avenue, served adult refreshment from the mid-1960s until the mid-1970s. Several businesses operating in the same service have occupied the site since the original Brown Derby. • Mestayer's Grocery Store, located on the northwest corner of Main and Bridge streets. The family-owned grocery store operated from the 1950s until the early 1980s. The building remains and has hosted a number of businesses in the intervening years. • Tan Vaughn's Barber Shop, an extremely small (less than 200 square feet) wooden structure that was located at the intersection of Main Street and Railroad Avenue (southeast corner). Tan's barbershop was in operation from the late 1940s until the early 1990s and contained a single barber chair, with two or three waiting chairs for customers. The structure was demolished in the 1990s and in its location is the Loreauville Town Hall. • From the 1940s until it was removed in the mid-1980s, Loreauville had a Tin Man-style water tower adjacent to the Loreauville Volunteer Fire Department Fire Station on Bridge Street. The tower was located between the fire station and the bridge and held approximately 50,000 U.S. gallons of water. Its architectural style was reminiscent of the
Tin Man in the movie
The Wizard of Oz. Tin Man water towers continue to dot the increasingly urbanized landscape in America, but are rapidly disappearing as more modern and larger capacity water towers are constructed as their replacement. With the construction of the new water tower at the north end of the village in the early 1980s, the original Tin Man water tower was declared obsolete and torn down. • Loreauville Movie Theater. This wood-framed structure was located on Main Street south of Bridge Street adjacent to Ed Broussard Marine Services. The structure is fondly remembered by many residents as providing entertainment during the late 1920s until after World War II. The movie theater transitioned from
silent films through modern films with local residents providing the musical accompaniment during the silent film era. The structure was demolished and removed in the 1970s. • Masso's Cafe, located in a small wooden structure between the Ed Broussard Marine Service Company and Bridge Street. Masso's was a small family-owned cafe operated by a local family. The cafe seated between 10 and 20 customers, with a small
lunch counter that accommodated four to five customers. Masso's Cafe was in operation from the mid-1950s until the late 1970s. The structure was demolished and removed during the late 1980s. •
Our Lady of Victory Catholic Church, located at the intersection of Daigre Street and Victory Drive. The present church building was erected in the 1970s to replace the original wooden church (later destroyed by fire in 1992) erected to serve the
African-American community during the days of
segregation. • St. Joseph's Catholic Church Hall, located on Main Street immediately adjacent to St. Joseph's Catholic Church, has been used by area residents for weddings,
wakes, celebrations, and meetings since its construction in the early 1960s. From the 1960s until the late 1980s, small school rooms in the rear of this facility were used to teach
catechism to local residents. Near the entrance to the hall is a bronze plaque commemorating the services and life of Father Thomas Connors, a bilingual French/English priest from the Our Lady of La Salette Order (
Missionaries of La Salette), who was assigned to St. Joseph's parish in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Father Connors perished in a rectory fire in central Louisiana, and the parish hall was posthumously dedicated to him. A separate memorial to the vision of
Our Lady of La Salette is in bronze in the front courtyard of St. Joseph's church. The St. Joseph's Church Hall remains in active use and serves as a frequent gathering place for many local residents. • St. Joseph's Catholic Church, located on Main Street in the center of the village. The current building was constructed in the early 1960s and modernized over the years as its congregation grew and improvements were required. Memorial bronze plaques recognizing Loreauville residents who were killed in
World War I,
World War II, the
Korean War, and the
Vietnam War adorn the four-sided concrete base of the flagpole immediately in front of the church. • Loreauville Hospital, part of the rural network of hospitals in Louisiana, is located at the southern end of the village along the east side of Main Street (Louisiana Highway 86). The hospital opened in the early 1960s and operated until its closure in the 1980s. The site has had intermittent use as a health clinic in the intervening years. The original Loreauville clinic was located in a wood-framed structure in what is now the St. Joseph's Catholic Church parking lot. This facility operated in the post World War II period until its closure in 1963. ==Gallery==